The Teardown



Door, bunk window, and door removed

There was nothing too noticeable after removing all of the windows and the door. A lot of my excitement during the teardown process was too see how well (or not) the Lil Loafer was built. As a teardrop manufacturer, I feel I built very quality trailers using both RV and furniture construction techniques. This experience would definitely play a part in the reconstruction method of Otis later on.  I didn’t have real high expectations for build quality of the Lil Loafer, but it was still being pulled down the road 54 years later. I would soon find out that Aristocrat, in my opinion, was no different than today’s RV manufactures. Things were pretty crooked, few “square” openings, millions of staples (that do very little over time to actually hold things together) and poor plumbing, electrical, and gas systems. But, with that said, again, Otis was still hanging around all these years later and the construction flaws are the reasons they are called “Recreational Vehicles”. Unlike our homes, RV’s are built to be disposable for cost and weight reasons, and not to be permantly lived in. I would soon start to find what an RV’s worst enemy can do without your average owner knowing about it.




Yes, water damage! 

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